Fiction
Nonfiction

The Evolution of U.S. Mortgage Securities

by Michael D. Youngblood
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Published by Brown Books Publishing Group
Discover the Four Vital Decades That Defined U.S. Mortgage Securitization
When Congress created Ginnie Mae through the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, it ushered in the first mortgagebacked security, an innovation that expanded access to homeownership nationwide. What followed was a dynamic journey through shifting economic and social forces as the architects of securitization labored to perfect the machinery by which the local mortgage market could go nationalbut not without profound trials.

In The Evolution of U.S. Mortgage Securities 19702010: Four Decades of Innovation, fintech entrepreneur Michael Youngblood applies his extensive experience in U.S. housing and mortgage markets to supply an essential history of the forty critical years when residential mortgage securitization underwent a heated laboratory of creativity. Through exhaustive research and detailed accounts, Youngblood illustrates how fragmented, local lending evolved into a vast, open marketplace by solving concrete problems: standardizing loans, spreading risk, and equalizing credit access. Beginning with FHA insurance and the first Ginnie Mae passthrough, Youngblood charts the buildout of agency programs, nonagency conduits, and multiclass CMOs/REMICs, showing how each product tackled funding mismatches, prepayment, and credit risk.

Part celebration of human ingenuity, part warning about the danger of forgetting hard lessons, Youngblood's history help us understand how future crises in mortgage lending may be averted through an honest examination of its origins and innovations, and a lasting dedication to the promise of home ownership across America.

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